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Hi Jerry, you should have got it. I sent it some time back.Edit - just realised I sent it to the wrong address. Sorry Jerry and apologies Sophiecentaur.I just rechecked my email address and it is correct. I will look again.
Quote from: witsend on 08/06/2009 17:14:53Hi Jerry, you should have got it. I sent it some time back.Edit - just realised I sent it to the wrong address. Sorry Jerry and apologies Sophiecentaur.I just rechecked my email address and it is correct. I will look again.
... if there was anything to the theory that is
AKF is another contributor who has found what may be an interesting phenomenon and has tried to explain it with a brand new but incomplete scientific hypothesis.
witsend: you should call a single wound device a coil or solenoid; it wouldn't be a transformer of the kind we think about in electronics.
Vern did you get to look at the circuit? It is just a simple R/L switching circuit, electricity 101. It is something I learned in Brooklyn Tech High School in the electrical course.
Vern have you done any circuit design over your career? Anyway you are excellent with knowledge of physics.
Edit - I thought solenoids were small? Have used only one half of double wound inductor? When does it become a transformer - when there's more than one winding?
Quote from: witsendEdit - I thought solenoids were small? Have used only one half of double wound inductor? When does it become a transformer - when there's more than one winding?Yes; a transformer transforms voltage and current from one circuit to another, increasing or decreasing the voltage and current. It usually takes two circuits would on the same core. But you can have a single winding that is tapped with a third wire.